These are quite possibly the cutest picture of baby animals on the Internet, and yes, we know there are many of them. But Mango the kitten and Milkshake the pitbull, delightful to the point of seizure, are seriously poised to conquer the cute

Bears are increasingly coming out of the forest in search of food, say wildlife experts. This one made for a remote train station, believed to be Tarbinskaya in Krasnoyarsk region. The creature lunged at the station window, protected by metal bars.

A whale flashes a killer smile as he homes in on his lunch, off Kona, Hawaii.The photograph shows what appears to be a big grin plastered across the face of a False Killer Whale as he patrols the sea looking for food. American photographer Doug Perrine, 60, snapped the shot.Picture: Doug Perrine/HotSpot Media

Bengal tiger Mulan Jamila plays with keeper Soleh at Al Khaffah Islamic school in Malang, Indonesia’s East Java province. The tiger is kept as a pet at the school under a government permit, according to the school. Soleh has fed the tiger 5 kg (11 lbs) of meat per day since the animal was three months old.Picture: REUTERS/Sigit Pamungkas

A white tiger cub growls for the camera at the Buenos Aires Zoo in Argentina. The cub’s mother, Cleo, a captive Bengal white tiger, gave birth to two females and two males on January 14Picture: AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko

Xiao Liwu, the youngest member of the panda family at the San Diego Zoo, got to play in the snow for the first time. The seven-month-old cub explored his snowy exhibit and had fun climbing all over mom Bai Yun. More than 15 tons of fresh snow was blown into the panda’s exhibit as part of an enrichment surprise for the pandas.Picture: REUTERS/San Diego Zoo/Ken Bohn

Kali, an orphaned polar bear cub, plays with a ball at the Alaska Zoo in Anchorage. The cub’s mother was shot in Point Lay, Alaska, on March 12 and the cub is temporarily staying at the zoo in Anchorage until it has a permanent home.Picture: Alaska Zoo, John Gomes/AP

Smiley Face !!The brightly decorated peacock spider – much like his feathered namesake – uses colour to show off to the female of the species. Its markings appear to form a face including eyes, nose, a mouth and even ginger hair which is unique to this species, called Maratus speciosus. The tiny spiders are only about four to five millimetres in length.Picture: JURGEN OTTO / CATERS NEWS

Gorgeous Serval !!by Josef Gelernter

Sea Life Senior Curator Chris Brown prepares to move Japanese Spider crab named Big Daddy as it settles in to its new home at Blackpool’s Sea Life Centre. The nine-foot claw-span of the giant Japanese Spider Crab, which is to be housed on the Golden Mile, makes him Europe’s biggest crab.Picture: Dave Thompson/PA

Another look at a giant Japanese Spider Crab, which can weigh as much as 44 pounds .

Two brown bears appear to be gossiping as they play in the snow at the Hagenbeck zoo in Hamburg, northern GermanyPicture: SVEN HOPPE/AFP/Getty Images

A large beetle creeps inside a wild flower in Mushager village near Amman, JordanPhotograph: Jamal Nasrallah/EPA

A Madagascar day gecko sits on a perch in the Masoal rainforest hall at the zoo in ZurichPhotograph: Arnd Wiegmann/Reuters

An eastern screech-owl hides in a tiny hole in a tree in Providence, Rhode Island. Photographer Peter Green spent two years attempting to capture the moment after being tipped off by friends about the bird’s quirky behaviourPhotograph: Peter Green/Barcroft Media

A peacock preens its feathers at the gardens of San Anton Palace, the official residence of Malta’s president, in Attard, outside VallettaPhotograph: DARRIN ZAMMIT LUPI/REUTERS

“Silhouettes of Africa”Kalahari lions walk along the dry Nossob riverbed in the early morning at Kgalagadi Transfrontier park in South Africaby Mario Moreno Photography / Barcroft Media/www.mariomorenophotography.comhttps://www.facebook.com/mariomorenophotographer

Take your antelope to work day !!Aluna, a baby Dik-dik, walks across a computer keyboard in the office of Tim Rowlands, curator of mammals at Chester Zoo, in England on March 12. The miniature antelope which is only 8 inches tall is being hand reared by the zoo after failing to bond with its mother.by Phil Noble / Reuters

Mini Meerkat!!A 6-week-old meerkat pup walks through the grass in its enclosure on March 11 at the Oakland Zoo in California. The Oakland Zoo is welcoming three 6-week-old meerkat pups to its current mob, or clan, of meerkats. The new pups are named Ayo, Rufaro and Nandi.by Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

A sleepy kingA lions yawns at Nairobi’s National Park in Kenya on March 11.by Marko Djurica / Reuters

Peculiar pig!!A hairless guinea pig called Mumps is presented at the international pet show in Lublin, Poland on March 9.by Wojciech Pacewicz / EPA

Mother and child !!A 3-week-old female Mishmi takin is seen with its mother on March 9 at the zoo in Wroclaw, Poland. The Mishmi takin is an endangered goat-antelope native to India, Myanmar and China.by Maciej Kulczynski / EPA

A good grip!!An almost 1-month-old male collared mangabey sits near its mother at the Wroclaw Zoo in Poland on March 8. Mangabey monkeys come from West Africa and live in the lower parts of the forests and floodplains. The species is threatened with extinction due to hunting.by Maciej Kulczynski / EPA

Surf’s up !!Dolphins surf along a wave during day three of the Association of Surfing Professionals World Tour event in Jeffreys Bay, South Africa.by Nic Bothma / EPA

Ugandan Elephant with a dancing bird on its back..by Jonothan Hen-Boisenhttp://500px.com/photo/29066655

This is Peanut the turtle, shortly after being found in Missouri in 1993. She was taken to to a zoo in St. Louis where the six-pack ring was removed.It seems that she was trapped in the plastic ring as a young turtle and was unable to free herself. Subsequently her shell moulded itself to the plastic ring and she grew in the strange shape you see here.Unfortunately the damage is permanent, but peanut is expected to live a long life and today she serves as a mascot for the fight against beach littering.Get Involved:Always cut up your six-pack ringsPick up litterTell others not to litterThrow fishing line away properlyKeep streets cleanClean up waterways with help from Adopt-a-River!http://www.dnr.state.mn.us/adoptriver/peanut.html